Each breath is little more than a desperate gasp as I vault over another fence. This new speed still feels alien in my body—like someone downloaded parkour skills directly into my muscles while I wasn’t looking.
I leap from a shed roof to a fence top, my mental map of the Blue Mountain territory flickering like a half-remembered dream. No time to check my phone. No time to slow down.
Can’t hear Ellie and her goons anymore, but that means nothing. Wolves move silent as shadows when they want to. And they definitely want to right now.
Where the fuck am I supposed to go?
Back to the camper means leading Ellie straight to the kids. The image of her near Bun makes my stomach twist into knots. And the alpha lodge is too far—Caine might be there, but I’d never make it without getting caught.
And, considering how our relationship telepathy is going, who knows the consequences of going there. Though it’s better than dying.
I spot the camper through a gap between houses, painfully close. I veer right instead, away from the children.
Better me than them.
One more fence. I gather momentum, pushing off from a garden planter, and launch myself over—
"OOF!"
My body slams into something solid. Someone solid. Arms and legs tangle as we tumble, sharp pain shooting through my hip and leg as we roll. When we stop, I’m straddling a body, my hands pressed against a familiar back.
"What the fuck?" Andrew groans beneath me, his face half-buried in dirt.
"Shit! Sorry." I scramble off him, my hip throbbing where it collided with his shoulder blade, or something else pointy and hard. "I didn’t see you!"
He flips over, spitting out a mouthful of dirt. "Since when do you drop out of the sky like a human missile?"
His irritation vanishes instantly when he sees my face. Whatever I look like, it sobers him immediately. "They’re after you."
I nod.
"Damn. I was hearing a lot of chatter across the pack link, but..." His face twists into annoyance as he looks in the direction I came. "Hurry up and get to the kids. I’ll deal with this."
Hah.
Like Andrew can deal with Ellie.
But his face is set and his eyes are dark as he pulls out his phone. When I don’t move, he looks at me again with impatience. "Get out of here!"
I hesitate, glancing from Andrew back toward the camper. Even in this moment, I’m not entirely sure how far I can trust him.
But a desperate victim can’t exactly throw away allies.
"Thanks," I manage to squeeze out between pants, the word feeling inadequate paired with my long-held suspicion of his motives.
"Go," he snaps, not even looking at me and completely unaware of the guilt scrawled all over my face.
The last glimpse I catch is his determined expression as he pulls out his phone. Time to cross my fingers he can actually handle Ellie and her pack of loyal attack dogs. He is Rafe’s best friend, but...
Well.
Can a cat and dog stand up to wolf shifters? The answer is no. Unequivocally so.
"Grace?" Ron’s voice pulls me back to reality. Bun sneezes, her tiny hands clutching his shirt for balance with the force of it. "Are you okay? You look like—"
"Get inside," I snap, waving him back into the camper as I remember I’m in frantic urgency. "Now!"
He hesitates, his eyes darting between me and the animals. "But Sadie—"
"I said get inside where it’s safe!" My voice comes out too sharp and shrill, but there’s no time for gentle. Not with Ellie potentially seconds away and Andrew’s efficacy as a guard in question.
Ron steps back obediently, pulling Bun closer to his chest. She buries her face in his shoulder, still staring at me with wide eyes.
"Get in here!" I shout at the animals while motioning behind me again for Ron to retreat further inside.
He finally complies, but I remain frozen on the steps, torn between safety and responsibility. Sadie continues her frenzied barking, hackles raised. The white cat prowls in tight circles, raising its head in yowling little growls.
They’re my responsibility now, aren’t they? These weird, possibly supernatural animals that have attached themselves to our bizarre little family. But they’re being complete assholes, not listening to a single command, and Ellie is somewhere behind me with every intention of tearing my arms from my body.
Sadie’s barking reaches a new pitch of hysteria, her entire body vibrating with the force of it, and I keep thinking about what a terrible person I’d be if she mutilated the pets because I was too scared to bring them inside.
"Fuck it," I mutter, abandoning rational thought as I lunge toward them.
I grab Sadie’s collar with one hand, my fingers barely getting purchase on the leather as she twists and pulls. With my other arm, I scoop up the white cat, who immediately becomes a hissing, clawing furnado.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Grace of a Wolf (by Lenaleia)
Grace needs to get a grip of herself and starts acting like a responsible adult if she wants Caine to treat her as his equal and trust her being a strong capable woman...
All the things she is thinking in her head, she should just tell him like that. Nothing wrong in saying she wants to be treated as equal, have responsibilities....
Well... i "acquired" as you say this child a couple of hours ago! Obviously I didn't make her overnight! 😅🤣...
Ferris 😍😍 Caine is definitely not the brightest bulb in the pack! 😅Thanks God Jack-Eye is smarter! 😉...
This girl is really slow to understand despite living with wolf for so many years.🙄 Caine is a caveman 🤦🏼♀️...
Yet again the wolf is smarter than the man.... Caine is missing really missing interactions skills!...
Fighting the obvious! I love 😍 Fenris! The escape plan is a dead one, completely...
So his wolf can separate and they speak together? Interesting 🤔😊 that's new...